50calshooter
Well-Known Member
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2013
- Messages
- 180
- Reaction score
- 166
What would be interesting would be a brewpub what is set up, where a homebrewer could come in, brew their own recipe, and be served and sold at the brewery.
(I'm making this up as I go along, with the help of a couple high test beers, so I don;t know anything about the legality of this...)
So the (home)brewer pays for the ingredients, possibly working with the brewpub to source them, and the profits would be split between the brewer and pub?
so, using the recipe for a tripel I'm ordering up, cost is about $40, I'd get about that many (US) pints out of 5 gallons. So if the pub was to sell that beer at $6 a pint, that's $5 profit, split, even 50/50, that's $100 to the pub. Scaling that up to even a 2 barrel system increases that, of course. I'd have to look at costs and such to see what would pay - even say $2 a pint to the brewer, so cost + a buck profit would result in a big profit for the pub. They may have their own house beers as well, aside from guest brewers.
Obviously there's costs to the pub - staff, insurance, the costs of the licenses and such, cost of the space, equipment, etc etc etc.
We do something like that. It's called our Guest Brewer Program. I ask a home brewer what he wants to brew then I get approval for my brewpub to brew and sell it from the state. Then they come in and brew. We promote it and he returns a month later and tends bar and pours it. I buy the ingredients and we charge standard price. The brewer gets one dollar for every pint sold, keeps all the tips, and gets a shirt to wear that says "I was a Guest Brewer at Uncle Bob's Brewpub". It's a lot of fun and the customers and Guest Brewer love it.
https://fb.me/e/6ZAogXSy6
https://fb.me/e/2KlaWi8Qb
https://fb.me/e/1zb4ucKUA
the shirt:
